CMS News
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 4, 2016
August 4, 2016
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Medicare announces participants in effort to
improve access, quality of care in rural areas
Today, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) announced the participants in the Frontier
Community Health Integration Project (FCHIP) Demonstration, an effort to
increase access to care for Medicare beneficiaries in areas of the country
where access to health services can be limited because of distance from
providers. Ten critical access hospitals (CAHs) in Montana, Nevada, and North
Dakota will participate in the Demonstration, which begins this August. The
FCHIP Demonstration is another example of how the Administration is working to
ensure that Americans receive better care, we spend our health care dollars
more wisely, and we have healthier people.
The FCHIP Demonstration, a
statutory mandate launched by the CMS Innovation Center in collaboration with
the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy, located in the Health Resources and
Services Administration, will test new models of integrated, coordinated health
care in the most sparsely populated rural counties in the nation over three
years. This demonstration program will encourage the ten CAHs to provide
essential services that are often not financially viable in rural communities
with the goals of improving quality of care, increasing patient satisfaction in
rural communities, and spending health care dollars more wisely. The
demonstration will provide financial incentives for care coordination
activities for local CAHs to reduce unnecessary admissions and readmissions
across their networks of care.
“Medicare beneficiaries who live in
frontier areas of the country sometimes travel hundreds of miles to see a
doctor. This increases the cost of care and can discourage beneficiaries from
seeking treatment,” said Patrick Conway, M.D., principal deputy administrator
and chief medical officer at CMS. “The effort that is beginning today will look
at ways to shrink the distance between the Medicare beneficiary and the care
they need.”
Applications were received from
CAHs in Montana, Nevada, and North Dakota (although eligible, CAHs in Alaska or
Wyoming did not apply).
Specifically, the demonstration
aims to:
- support
the CAH and local delivery system in keeping patients within the community
who might otherwise be transferred to distant providers;
- test
whether payments for certain services will enhance access to care for
patients, increase the integration and coordination of care among
providers, and reduce avoidable hospitalizations, admissions, and
transfers; and
- test
new CAH activities in three service categories: skilled nursing care,
telehealth, and ambulance services.
HRSA’s Federal Office of Rural
Health Policy will monitor the work of the technical assistance provider,
Montana Health and Research Education Foundation, and collect information on
key policy challenges facing frontier providers, while CMS will test
alternative payment and administrative strategies.
For more information on the
Frontier Community Health Integration Project Demonstration, please visit: https://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/Frontier-Community-Health-Integration-Project-Demonstration/.
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